Weekend Report: 'Harry' Makes History
by Brandon Gray
July 17, 2011
Working its final movie mojo, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 soared into the record books with the highest-grossing opening weekend ever. The series finale drew an estimated $168.55 million on around 11,000 screens at 4,375 locations, dethroning The Dark Knight's $158.4 million.
Deathly Hallows Part 2's first weekend flew past the previous franchise high of $125 million, posted by Deathly Hallows Part 1 last November, and it topped the franchise in terms of estimated attendance as well. While its opening gross also out-distanced The Dark Knight, Spider-Man 3 ($151.1 million), The Twilight Saga: New Moon ($142.8 million), Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest ($135.6 million) and the first Spider-Man ($114.8 million), Deathly Hallows Part 2's estimated opening attendance was less than those titles, ranking sixth overall.
After conjuring the opening day record of $92.1 million on Friday (buoyed by a record-shattering $43.5 million midnight launch), Deathly Hallows Part 2 saw the steepest Friday-to-Saturday drop on record for a non-holiday first weekend, falling 53 percent to an estimated $42.85 million. Its Saturday slotted ninth among the top-grossing Saturdays of all time. Distributor Warner Bros. projected a 22 percent Saturday-to-Sunday decline to $33.6 million, which would rank eighth on the all-time Sunday grosses chart.
Deathly Hallows Part 2 marked Harry Potter's first foray into 3D, and it made a splash with the broadest 3D launch ever (3,100-plus locations, including 274 in IMAX). However, the majority of moviegoers still opted to see the movie in the standard ("2D") format. 3D accounted for 43 percent of the gross, which was a lower share than Transformers: Dark of the Moon's 60 percent at the same point but in the ballpark of most of this summer's other big movies. Still, at an estimated $72.5 million, that translated to the second biggest-grossing 3D opening yet, behind Alice in Wonderland (2010)'s $81.3 million. In IMAX alone, Deathly Hallows Part 2 delivered the top-grossing start ever, generating $15.5 million versus Alice's second-place $12.2 million.
According to Warner Bros., 54 percent of Deathly Hallows Part 2's audience was female, compared to 57 percent for the last movie, and 45 percent was under 25 years old, compared to 56 percent for the last movie.
As a franchise, Harry Potter has now grossed $2.177 billion, and it's on the brink of eclipsing Star Wars' $2.218 billion to become the top-grossing franchise in history. In terms of estimated attendance, though, the eight Potter movies have had 57 percent of the impact of the seven Star Wars movies. Star Wars even wins on this front when just its initial releases are counted. However, Harry Potter has earned its place in the pantheon with remarkably consistent blockbuster performances. After Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, the sequels' maximum attendance difference was less than 20 percent. That first movie, though, should remain the best-attended, even as Deathly Hallows Part 2 becomes the top-grossing entry.
Since Deathly Hallows Part 2 alone accounted for nearly two out of every three tickets sold this weekend, there was little excitement for the rest of the movies. Transformers: Dark of the Moon retreated 55 percent to an estimated $21.25 million. Though it didn't gain ground on its predecessors, the robo-threequel became the first movie of 2011 to cross the $300 million milestone, tallying $302.8 million in 19 days.
Horrible Bosses took a respectable hit, down 38 percent to an estimated $17.6 million. It held better than Bad Teacher and matched that movie's $60 million ten-day sum. Zookeeper continued its disappointing run with an estimated $12.3 milion, though it was off a decent 39 percent. Its $42.4 million ten-day tally was less than two thirds of Paul Blart: Mall Cop through day ten. Cars 2 rounded out the Top Five with an estimated $8.3 million, slowing 45 percent. With a $165.3 million total in 24 days, the animated sequel began trailing Ratatouille in terms of gross, not just attendance, for a 12-year Pixar low.
In the face of Harry Potter, Winnie the Pooh started with a whimper: an estimated $8 million at 2,405 locations. That was an improvement over Pooh's Heffalump Movie and Piglet's Big Movie, but it was behind The Tigger Movie. Distributor Walt Disney Pictures' exit polling indicated that 85 percent of the audience was parents and their children, and 62 percent was female. In terms of age, 38 percent was kids age 11 years old and younger, while 53 percent was 18 and older.
Meanwhile, Midnight in Paris surpassed Hannah and Her Sisters to become Woody Allen's highest-grossing movie ever, though it ranked as Allen's seventh in terms of estimated attendance and won't go higher. Midnight reached $41.8 million in 59 days.
by Brandon Gray
July 17, 2011
Working its final movie mojo, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 soared into the record books with the highest-grossing opening weekend ever. The series finale drew an estimated $168.55 million on around 11,000 screens at 4,375 locations, dethroning The Dark Knight's $158.4 million.
Deathly Hallows Part 2's first weekend flew past the previous franchise high of $125 million, posted by Deathly Hallows Part 1 last November, and it topped the franchise in terms of estimated attendance as well. While its opening gross also out-distanced The Dark Knight, Spider-Man 3 ($151.1 million), The Twilight Saga: New Moon ($142.8 million), Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest ($135.6 million) and the first Spider-Man ($114.8 million), Deathly Hallows Part 2's estimated opening attendance was less than those titles, ranking sixth overall.
After conjuring the opening day record of $92.1 million on Friday (buoyed by a record-shattering $43.5 million midnight launch), Deathly Hallows Part 2 saw the steepest Friday-to-Saturday drop on record for a non-holiday first weekend, falling 53 percent to an estimated $42.85 million. Its Saturday slotted ninth among the top-grossing Saturdays of all time. Distributor Warner Bros. projected a 22 percent Saturday-to-Sunday decline to $33.6 million, which would rank eighth on the all-time Sunday grosses chart.
Deathly Hallows Part 2 marked Harry Potter's first foray into 3D, and it made a splash with the broadest 3D launch ever (3,100-plus locations, including 274 in IMAX). However, the majority of moviegoers still opted to see the movie in the standard ("2D") format. 3D accounted for 43 percent of the gross, which was a lower share than Transformers: Dark of the Moon's 60 percent at the same point but in the ballpark of most of this summer's other big movies. Still, at an estimated $72.5 million, that translated to the second biggest-grossing 3D opening yet, behind Alice in Wonderland (2010)'s $81.3 million. In IMAX alone, Deathly Hallows Part 2 delivered the top-grossing start ever, generating $15.5 million versus Alice's second-place $12.2 million.
According to Warner Bros., 54 percent of Deathly Hallows Part 2's audience was female, compared to 57 percent for the last movie, and 45 percent was under 25 years old, compared to 56 percent for the last movie.
As a franchise, Harry Potter has now grossed $2.177 billion, and it's on the brink of eclipsing Star Wars' $2.218 billion to become the top-grossing franchise in history. In terms of estimated attendance, though, the eight Potter movies have had 57 percent of the impact of the seven Star Wars movies. Star Wars even wins on this front when just its initial releases are counted. However, Harry Potter has earned its place in the pantheon with remarkably consistent blockbuster performances. After Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, the sequels' maximum attendance difference was less than 20 percent. That first movie, though, should remain the best-attended, even as Deathly Hallows Part 2 becomes the top-grossing entry.
Since Deathly Hallows Part 2 alone accounted for nearly two out of every three tickets sold this weekend, there was little excitement for the rest of the movies. Transformers: Dark of the Moon retreated 55 percent to an estimated $21.25 million. Though it didn't gain ground on its predecessors, the robo-threequel became the first movie of 2011 to cross the $300 million milestone, tallying $302.8 million in 19 days.
Horrible Bosses took a respectable hit, down 38 percent to an estimated $17.6 million. It held better than Bad Teacher and matched that movie's $60 million ten-day sum. Zookeeper continued its disappointing run with an estimated $12.3 milion, though it was off a decent 39 percent. Its $42.4 million ten-day tally was less than two thirds of Paul Blart: Mall Cop through day ten. Cars 2 rounded out the Top Five with an estimated $8.3 million, slowing 45 percent. With a $165.3 million total in 24 days, the animated sequel began trailing Ratatouille in terms of gross, not just attendance, for a 12-year Pixar low.
In the face of Harry Potter, Winnie the Pooh started with a whimper: an estimated $8 million at 2,405 locations. That was an improvement over Pooh's Heffalump Movie and Piglet's Big Movie, but it was behind The Tigger Movie. Distributor Walt Disney Pictures' exit polling indicated that 85 percent of the audience was parents and their children, and 62 percent was female. In terms of age, 38 percent was kids age 11 years old and younger, while 53 percent was 18 and older.
Meanwhile, Midnight in Paris surpassed Hannah and Her Sisters to become Woody Allen's highest-grossing movie ever, though it ranked as Allen's seventh in terms of estimated attendance and won't go higher. Midnight reached $41.8 million in 59 days.
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